This monograph describes the contributions to our current understanding
of quality of life made by the most important ancient philosophers in
the Western Tradition. It does so from the point of view of a
contemporary researcher in quality of life or human well-being.
Revisiting ancient texts from about 600 BCE to 300 BCE, the book
explores the earliest ideas in recorded western philosophical and
scientific history that were significantly related to current research
and understanding of the quality of life or well-being for individuals
and communities. It examines the problems and solutions found in these
texts and their connection to still current fundamental issues and
questions such as: 'What is a good life?', 'What is the best sort of
person to be?' 'How can one tell if one's society is making progress to
some sort of desirable state or falling backwards?' The book shows that
across time and across many cultures, the human species bears some
remarkable similarities.